Share

Colonizing Culture

by: Dahr Jamail, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

An Iraqi boy walks down a street in southern Baqouba, surrounded by US Army soldiers.

An Iraqi boy walks down a street in southern Baqouba, surrounded by US Army soldiers. (Photo: Marko Drobnjakovic / AP)

    Transgress

    The geo-strategic expansion of the American empire is an accepted fact of contemporary history. I have been writing in these columns about the impact of the US occupation on the people of Iraq in the wake of the "hard" colonization via F-16s, tanks, 2,000-pound bombs, white phosphorous and cluster bombs.

    Here I offer a brief glimpse into the less obvious but far more insidious phenomenon of "soft" colonization. That scholars and political thinkers have talked at length of such processes only establishes the uncomfortable reality that history is bound to repeat itself in all its ugliness, unless the human civilization makes a concerted effort to eliminate the use of brute force from human affairs.

    Gandhi, the apostle of non-violent resistance said:

"I do not want my house to be walled in on all sides and my windows to be stuffed. I want the cultures of all the lands to be blown about my house as freely as possible. But I refuse to be blown off my feet by any. I refuse to live in other people's houses as an interloper, a beggar or a slave."

    This is an idea rendered irrelevant in the current scenario, where the mightier among the world's nations have secured the mandate to invade, with impunity, any society and any state that can be exploited for resources. Unlike earlier times, modern-day invasions are invariably camouflaged by a façade of elaborate deceit that claims altruistic intent as the motive of assault. In this new scheme of things, resistance is deemed as insurgency and dissent is unpatriotic. Those that are invaded do not have the luxury to decide between being beggar and slave. Culture would be the last thing on their minds as they struggle to stay alive. Yet it is the loss of their culture that ultimately causes the disintegration of these societies to the absolute advantage of their victors.

    It is said that history is written by the victor. What is not said is that destroying the enemy is only half the purpose of a victor. The other half is the subjugation and drastic alteration of the self-perception of the enemy, so as to gain unquestioned control over every aspect of the subjugated state, its populace and its resources, so that having won victory it can get on with the "much bigger business of plunder," according to Franz Fanon, philosopher, psychiatrist, author and a pre-eminent thinker of the twentieth century.

    At one level we have the Human Terrain System (HTS) I have written about previously wherein social scientists are embedded with combat units, ostensibly to help the occupiers better understand the cultures they are occupying. The veiled intent is to exploit existing schisms and fault-lines in these societies to the occupier's own advantage through the policy of divide and conquer.

    As Edward Said stated in "Orientalism":

"... there is a difference between knowledge of other peoples and other times that is the result of understanding, compassion, careful study and analysis for their own sakes, and on the other hand knowledge - if that is what it is - that is part of an overall campaign of self-affirmation, belligerency, and outright war. There is, after all, a profound difference between the will to understand for purposes of coexistence and humanistic enlargement of horizons, and the will to dominate for the purposes of control and external enlargement of horizons, and the will to dominate for the purposes of control and external dominion."

    It is extremely obvious that the HTS belongs to this second category.

    At another unquestioned level, the "democratization" and "modernization" of a "barbaric" society goes on. The embedded scholars of HTS evidently find no evidence of these cultures having withstood decades of international isolation and assault, yet sustained their sovereignty by the sheer dint of their education, culture and a well-integrated diverse social fabric. So the US sets up a range of state-funded programs, ostensibly to empower the women and youth of the target society, in the ways of democracy and modern civilization. Whether or not that suspect goal is accomplished, the badgered collective consciousness of the invaded people, traumatized by loss and conflict, does begin to submit to the "norms" of behavior prescribed by the victor, even when they are in violation of actual norms of society that may have prevailed prior to invasion.

    Transform

    Fanon said:

"A national culture under colonial domination is a contested culture whose destruction is sought in systematic fashion."
    Describing the psychopathology of colonization he said, "Every effort is made to bring the colonized person to admit the inferiority of his culture which has been transformed into instinctive patterns of behavior, to recognize the unreality of his 'nation', and, in the last extreme, the confused and imperfect character of his own biological structure."

    Fanon's speech to the Congress of Black African Writers in 1959 is an uncanny description of Iraq's tragedy today:

"Colonial domination, because it is total and tends to over-simplify, very soon manages to disrupt in spectacular fashion the cultural life of a conquered people. This cultural obliteration is made possible by the negation of national reality, by new legal relations introduced by the occupying power, by the banishment of the natives and their customs to outlying districts by colonial society, by expropriation, and by the systematic enslaving of men and women ...
    "For culture is first the expression of a nation, the expression of its preferences, of its taboos and of its patterns. It is at every stage of the whole of society that other taboos, values and patterns are formed. A national culture is the sum total of all these appraisals; it is the result of internal and external extensions exerted over society as a whole and also at every level of that society. In the colonial situation, culture, which is doubly deprived of the support of the nation and of the state, falls away and dies."

    At times we may witness blatant violations as in the distribution of backpacks with US flags to Iraqi children.

    A more repulsive example is the Skin White Serum. One of many companies engaged in selling skin-bleaching cream is Skin White Research Labs. They proudly sell Skin White Serum in "over 30 countries." There are countless other companies involved in this market, selling similar products, like Skin White Bleaching Cream and Xtreme White.

    The hidden message here is that, politically, those in the culture being colonized should seek to cover their brown skin, which is in fact part of their ethnic identity, and aspire to the culture, power and influence of the dominant culture at the expense of their own.

    Somewhat less subtle is the corporate colonization of Iraq's culture. An example of this is Iraqi girls carrying Barbie backpacks in the Sadr City area of Baghdad.

    In Iraq and Afghanistan, the dominant culture for a while now has been the US military. Since it has all the firepower and the brute force, it sets the norms and the standard. This is done by repeated suggestions through propaganda, and advertisements suggesting that the local population is of lesser worth than the occupiers of their country in their appearance, their beliefs, their customs and their way of life.

    The material practices of society sustain its culture, which is the lifeline of identity, and affirmation that the progress of a nation depends on. Social custom, production systems, education, art and architecture are a few of the visible pillars of culture.

    Community and custom become the first casualties when an entire people, unequal in the face of military might, struggle to survive under perpetual fear of loss and death. In a state of vacuum, the threatened society will grasp whatever is offered by the occupier as a "better" way of living. In the process it is bound to lose its own tried and tested self-sustaining modes of living.

    With the destruction of infrastructure, education, health and livelihood sources are destroyed. When rehabilitation and restoration come packaged in alien systems of knowledge (read-USAID), that, too, is accepted in the absence of what existed earlier.

    Literature, art and architecture meet with more systemic demolition.

    My artist friends in Baghdad have reported,

"The occupation forces encouraged the rebels to loot museum and libraries. Five thousand years of history and art were irretrievably lost in hours. It is a loss for the world, not Iraq alone. Buildings can be fixed, so can electricity, but where can I find another Khalid al-Rahal to make me a new statue for Abu Fafar al-Mansoor? How will I replace the artifacts dating back to thousands of years? Iraq is altered forever."

    I have heard from ordinary men and women in Iraq, "We need our art, because it connects us with what has brought us here, and reminds us of where we are headed." Dr. Saad Eskander has been director general of whatever remains of Iraq's National Archive and Library and he says, "This building was burned twice, and looted. We have lost sixty percent of our archival collections like maps, historical records and photographs. Twenty-five percent of our books were lost ... It has crippled our culture, and culture reaches to the bottom of peoples' hearts, whereas politics do not."

    It is not difficult to see that the extent of devastation caused by the invasion and occupation of Iraq goes beyond loss of life, livelihood and property. The historical and cultural roots of the nation have been destroyed.

  

»


Dahr Jamail, an independent journalist, is the author of "The Will to Resist: Soldiers Who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan," (Haymarket Books, 2009), and "Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches From an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq," (Haymarket Books, 2007). Jamail reported from occupied Iraq for nine months as well as from Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Turkey over the last five years.

Comments

This is a moderated forum.  It may take a little while for comments to go live. Be civil and on-topic, don't threaten or advocate violence, please keep it under 300 words. Thanks for participating.

At the risk of setting off

At the risk of setting off those who mindlessly support soldiers, may I add to this the perception that the US deliberately fights "dirty"--weapons have been chosen which do obscene damage to flesh and bone, starting now with the basic infantry soldier's rifle, the M-16. A few minutes studying how its bullets work on impact leads to the conclusion that it is intended to maim if it hits any part of a hand, foot, arm or leg at all, to slaughter if it hits any more central part of the body. As civilians bear the brunt of all wars we (the US wage) it means that civilians will be hit the most often by a US bullet, no matter our announced intentions. It is no wonder so many of the wounded have died. Recruits are not told that today's rifle represents a change toward the inhumane, though the old rifles were certainly awful. If, from the first moments in the military, one is being prepared to rend and tear flesh accidentally, and smash bone without thought, of what consequence is a book, a painting, or musical instruments?

Don't kid yourself. The

Don't kid yourself. The U.S.A. just provides the military for the invisible power structure. We have been recolonized, culturally and economically. Trade and conquest is an old game and "Americans" that war for profit are doing the bidding of the multinational corporations. Reagan escalated the big sell-off to "foreign investors". We don't even own this country anymore. Where is most of our our tax money going?

If, from the first moments

If, from the first moments in the military, one is being prepared to rend and tear flesh accidentally, and smash bone without thought, of what consequence is a book, a painting, or musical instruments? ~Warren in Miami This should be emblazoned on t-shirts, bumper stickers, and... backpacks. Submit this to the War Resisters League or any group working to put an end to violence and war. Turn it into an op-ed piece. Whatever you do, disseminate it.

Now, if only we could get

Now, if only we could get SOMEONE besides Jamail to admit that the wars of the past few years have been waged for the purpose of colonization. It seems to be a forbidden thought.

Well, just wondering what

Well, just wondering what there end game is?! Once all is in total control, what is left go after? Oh, maybe that is the reason for a "space" program. Would it not be great IF all those whom desire control would just leave! Somehow I still see tracks in the sand no matter what does transpire.

This essay is nothing short

This essay is nothing short of brilliant, a summary of what Tibor Mende was describing 40 years ago when this new machinery of ensuring domination changed to the actual simulacres of democracy. Now China and Russia, eager to join the Big Loot, have expanded out of their traditional territories, adding to the complexity of the Great Game. Mr. Jamail describes specific cases, of our immediate time, where we can witness live demos of what he explains. How can we not see it ? Why do we need quotes from Ghandi, himself victim of a fanatic assassin, a metaphor of things to come, Lumumba, Kennedy, Allende, Massoud and so many others quietly disposed of who had essentialy challenged this new order ? I humbly suggest that we rename Sapiens Sapiens into Stultus Mortiferans for a more accurate description of the human species.

In the US, when a young man

In the US, when a young man comes of age and begins to seek direction & purpose for his overflowing energies, he is seldom culturally prepared for or offered a choice that is not some part of a larger systematic destructive force. The creative instinct & the work ethic are lost and need to be revived as a positive outlet for energy. A symbiotic relationship exists between those who destroy the culture of others and the destruction their own culture, which allows them to ignore and go against all of the most important values that they grew up with in their own culture. We "hide" our humanity beneath an arrogant superiority in times of war, all the while knowing that we are not loved for our strengths but for our thoughtfulness and acts of kindness toward others, historically expressed through the arts -which are often suppressed in schools to desensitize children for wars.

Thank you.As predatory

Thank you.As predatory colonizers we have become, the means so ugly and contaminating us all--& the path of our downfall--as other colonizers--we simply are not victorious, because, in the end,the price is too great.

Mr. Jamail, This is a

Mr. Jamail, This is a beautiful piece straight from the heart. How profoundly cruel and perverse were the invaders. What happened was not incidental to the invasion, but premeditated to add anguish to injury, and framed to show intent of subjugation. Even Napoleon knew to save the art, artifacts, and cultural icons. He appreciated them, even "borrowed" some of them.

When will we quit playing

When will we quit playing the Democrat/Republican game? Please examine the possibility that it is a sham and there are greater powers pulling the strings. As long as we don't know we can't win.

This same process is being

This same process is being done to the Berbers by the Arab colonizers, and to most Islamic countries by the insistence on teaching the Koran in Arabic, bringing with it Arab cultural imper;ialism. It is aso being done to the Palestinians by the Israelis, to women by patriarchy, and to many cultures by patriarchal Christianity. There is a Christianity that is more culturally sensitive and gentle, and that helps many national liberation struggles, such as the Quakers etc.

When my son first arrived in

When my son first arrived in Iraq in 2004 he couldn't wait to experience the culture first-hand of the civilization he had studied in the Bible for all those years. He was sickened by the rubble and the contempt shown for Iraq's ancient society. He was more appalled, as a medic, at what the American weapons could do to children. Somehow, the American military system does not prepare its soldiers for the fact that innocents will be hurt, and those soldiers are devastated by it. Suicides and PTSD, who would wonder at these given the horrors? My son couldn't take a very, very lucrative job with the Scottsdale Trauma Center after his deployment because, as he told me, he could never bear to work again where he would have to deal with maimed children. He was the soul of calm when dealing with the crises an EMT faces, but that went by the way with war.

Don't kid

Don't kid yourself......excellent comment, well observed( ie of History of the USA/Chomsky would be proud) This is indeed the bidding of an faceless /nameless/country-less entity..thats what's makes it so powerful. You see you are "outside the circle" and can apply pressure from the outside of the sphere. That is the ultimate genius, you get "others " do the dying and spending for you, meanwhile you watch from you Apple Cinema the profits rollin while you puff on your Cohiba on your yacht in the Caribbean somewhere

How can any

How can any “Colonizer’s" culture of "Abusive Might is Right” ever be dismantled? ‎Thanks, Dahr!!‎

After the invasion and the

After the invasion and the pillage of the national Iraqi treasures (some returned) I naively thought that the U.S. "enlightened" country that it is, would do all in its power to put on first priority basis the saving of the world's oldest known culture. Now everytime I hear of a bomb dropped in any Iraqi desert,I cringe : how many of the sumerian finds left to be excavated will there be? Or will there be nothing but dust? Is there any kind of course given to all soldiers called to fight on the ground at least a modicum of information that the vase they are using for target practice and fun is irreplaceable ?

Excellent Dahr. What a pity,

Excellent Dahr. What a pity, the ones who should read this, probably won't.

Brilliant article. In a

Brilliant article. In a somewhat more subtle fashion, this is what the Chinese are doing to the Tibetans in their take-over of Tibet.

how about the *continual*

how about the *continual* jackhammering of American culture into other societies. I sat in a *hut* in the middle of the freaking Yucatán 2 years ago... -the children were playing on the dirt floor -the Grandmother was making flatbreads over an open fire -the Mother was sewing tourist-ware ON THE WALL was a TV playing episodes of "90210" An American, consumerist elitist culture, broadcast to people living in a freaking hut in the middle of the jungle. a culture that blares about: - 'buy! buy! buy!', - 'pretty people look like American magazines!', - community warping, disrespectful 'in your face' interpersonal communications, - a prevalence of 'rich, beautiful folks are *white*'/folks of colour are poor & criminal, - an narcissistic, 'zero-sum' game mentality of 'might makes right'... broadcasting 24/7, across the Globe... with that ever-present 'if you're not Americanized, you're 3rd World bums' subtext. its disgusting: & it says *everything* about the few things American culture has to sell us: ADVERTISING, PROPAGANDA & 'American Imperial Exceptionalism' that erodes local, organic cultures

The violence the U.S. spews

The violence the U.S. spews around the globe today is the same violence ravaged upon the americas by europeans centuries ago. It is about desperation (then, how do we feed ourselves, now, how do we feed ourselves, fuel our SUVs and heat or shower water) and the means and will to take forcefully from others what we ourselves don't posses. oil is a curse that feeds the swelling human population. when oil is gone, the human population will crash and the earth can heal. peace.

Ach! And so it is Dahr. We

Ach! And so it is Dahr. We came, we conquered, we destroyed. The good news is we're now broke. Empires have a shelf life and ours is near it's end. (see England, Spain,Holland...) Actually Wall Street did us in. The financial whiz kids found a way to make an easy buck-selling junk as gold-and they're hooked on their ways. They don't want to work hard--as in making things. So down the tubes of history we go--of course the Pentagon helped--a trillion for war every year and the constant invasions, occupations, dronings.. We also had a rich caste that refused to pay taxes or serve in the military, really awful leadership (see Rome)..

Does anyone see how this is

Does anyone see how this is going on here in the US as well? This article, well written as it is, makes no mention of the well known phenomenon of 'unconscious emulation of the oppressors'. People will take on what they see as the attributes of the dominating power. That is also why American women buy into the idea that they should behave more like men in many ways. They are liberated when they wear pants and call themselves 'host' or 'actor' instead of 'hostess' or 'actress'. This behavior is the opposite of liberated, but it's universal nevertheless.

Most people look around and

Most people look around and know that something is just not right but cannot put their finger on it. What they don’t realize is that it is our own culture, the overwhelming desire to be free and just, that we are being duped into giving up. I thank truth out and the internet for showing some who care to look. I find it ironic that corporate owned media is wholly complicit in deception, but at the same time greatly shows US what the problem is by their own actions, by their inability to print the truth. In the book of John..... The truth shall set you free. Then it can be said that our deception will enslave US. What good are our possessions when you have lost your freedom? Is that the end of the American Dream? This is not a shining path for US.

As one of the other comments

As one of the other comments points out citing the US junk TV programming beamed into an impoverished Central American's home, imperialism now has more powerful instruments than ever for destroying all rival cultures on the planet. Americans themselves are being turned into amnesiac people from nowhere consumer zombies too. And the same applies to Europe or anywhere else. Where there are any signs of resistance the bombs and drones are sure to appear.

Thanks to Dahr Jamail, many

Thanks to Dahr Jamail, many of us are literate on what's actually going on in Iraq. Were it not for him, it would be quite otherwise.

Can we break the cycle?

Can we break the cycle? Violence and abuse in a family is often passed down to the next generation. Obviously the children hate it when they experience it, but they learn the pattern without realizing it and repeat it when they become adults. In exactly the same way, Americans have learned aggressive colonialism, repression and violent cultural dominance from our European forefathers as they subjugated the people of the "New World" (itself an arrogant term). We, their children, repeat the cycle.

This article is well written

This article is well written and thoughtful. It is a sad reminder that many people cannot let go of the past but only perpetuate the violence and the ignorance that leads to the dismantling of the wrld. Thank You Mr. Jahml for your continued allegiance to justice social, economic and political. Please keep up the good work.

Dahr Jamail's perceptions

Dahr Jamail's perceptions deal with at least two levels of action. One is that of cultural dominance, as enforced by "intellectual property" rights to export North Atlantic "media product " without restricetion. This both erodes traditional and national cultures which form the basis for social organization and interpersonal relations in other societies, and provides implicit "values" of consumption and accumulation as replacements. The North Atlantic community uses perversions of basic values of freedom of expression and commerce to support international agreements and conventions supporting this activity. The second is the destruction of the sense of self efficacy and self respect in members of other nations and cultures through violent oppression and physical subjugation - the military and policing activities he and other commenters describe so viscerally. The ideology, and the shape of the practice behind this action is quite visible in the writings of the German (pro Nazi) philosopher Carl Schmitt (sometimes considered more important than even Leo Strauss in the neo conservative pantheon) and in contemporary US writer Ralph Peters as described in a posting by Jeremy Scahill at Antiwar.com and available here at Truthout (May 21). For potential antidotes, badly needed, but hard to find, I suggest the rigorous tolerance of the Voltaire side of the sorrowfully divided and traduced european Enlightenment and the practical philosophy of anti slavery writer Wendell Phillips, as outlined by Joel Olson in his paper "Friends and Enemies, Slaves and Masters: Carl Schmitt, Wendell Phillips, and the Radical Critique of Political Moderation"

You shall reap what you sow!

You shall reap what you sow!

The purpose of an empire is

The purpose of an empire is for the colonizer to extract the resources of colonies to enrich the colonizer which is typically done by adding value to the extracted wealth and then marketing it for profit, sometimes selling it back to the colony at a higher price, such as was the case for India. This is the DEFINITION OF A SUCCESSFUL EMPIRE. A definition of a FAILED EMPIRE[the USA] is when the wealth of the colonizer, the USA, exceeds the benefits of the wealth being extracted from the colonies. This is what lead to the collapse of the USSR, the wealth of the Russian Republic exceeded the wealth being extracted from the other Republics. The USA is Using the USSR model, a failed model by defintion.

Thank y0u for sharing this

Thank y0u for sharing this obscenely horrible reality (of colonization) with us with such characteristic lucidity and brilliance.

Isn't Israel doing the same

Isn't Israel doing the same in the occupied territories in Palestine?